Reinsurance: Managing Catastrophic Risk in a Dangerous World
| INTRODUCTION | 1 | 
| SECTION 1: THE IMPACT OF NATURAL AND MAN-MADE DISASTERS ON THE WORLD SCENE | 2 | 
| A WORLDWIDE PROBLEM: UNDERSTANDING THE DISASTER | 2 | 
| REVIEW | 4 | 
| THE COST OF NATURAL DISASTERS ON THE INSURANCE INDUSTRY: A CHALLENGING PROBLEM | 5 | 
| Table 1.1 – Top Ten Global Insured Loss Events in 2022 | 6 | 
| CALIFORNIA: THE STATE ON FIRE | 7 | 
| THE FREQUENCY OF WILDFIRES IN CALIFORNIA | 8 | 
| PROPOSITION 103 AND THE LIMITATIONS OF UNDERWRITING REGULATIONS | 9 | 
| THE CHALLENGE OF CONSTRUCTION COSTS, SUPPLY ISSUES & INFLATION | 9 | 
| THE RESULTS: WHAT ARE INSURANCE COMPANIES DOING IN CALIFORNIA? | 10 | 
| REVIEW | 10 | 
| LEARNING FROM THE PAST: THE INSURANCE INDUSTRY AND FLOOD COVERAGE | 11 | 
| REVIEW | 12 | 
| A VICIOUS CYCLE OR A NATURAL ONE? | 12 | 
| Graph 1.1 – Number of recorded natural disaster evens from 1900-2022 | 13 | 
| Christchurch Earthquake, New Zealand, February 2011 | 14 | 
| Drought, United States, Summer 2012 | 14 | 
| The Great Flood of 2011, Thailand, November 2011 | 15 | 
| Hurricane Sandy, United States, October 2012 | 15 | 
| Hurricane Irma, U.S. Virgin Islands & the United States, 2017 | 15 | 
| Hurricane Maria, Dominica & Puerto Rico, September 2017 | 16 | 
| Hurricane Harvey, United States, August 2017 | 16 | 
| Hurricane Katrina, United States, August 2005 | 16 | 
| Sichuan Earthquake, China, May 2008 | 17 | 
| Tohoku Earthquake & Tsunami, Japan, March 2011 | 17 | 
| REVIEW | 17 | 
| CONCLUSION: LOOKING TOWARDS THE FUTURE | 18 | 
| Table 1.2 – Losses Comparison | 18 | 
| KEY POINTS | 19 | 
| SECTION 2: THE HISTORY OF REINSURANCE | 20 | 
| THE HISTORY OF THE REINSURANCE INDUSTRY | 21 | 
| REINSURANCE IN THE 1300S-1600S: EARLY MENTIONS OF REINSURANCE | 21 | 
| REVIEW | 22 | 
| REINSURANCE IN THE 1900s: THE EMERGENCE OF REINSURANCE COMPANIES | 22 | 
| The Great Fire of Hamburg | 24 | 
| Carl Von Thieme | 25 | 
| REVIEW | 28 | 
| REINSURANCE IN THE 20TH CENTURY: ADAPTING TO A CHANGING WORLD | 28 | 
| Risk Management | 30 | 
| REVIEW | 32 | 
| REINSURANCE IN THE 21ST CENTURY: A FIGHT AGAINST OVERWHELMING ODDS | 32 | 
| Figure 2.1 – Loss Distribution By Insurance Type for September 11, 2001 | 33 | 
| TRIA | 34 | 
| Risk-based pricing | 36 | 
| Subprime borrowers | 37 | 
| Credit default swaps & derivatives | 38 | 
| KEY POINTS | 39 | 
| SECTION 3: REINSURANCE– MANAGING CATASTROPHIC RISK IN A DANGEROUS WORLD | 40 | 
| TYPES OF CATASTROPHIC EVENTS: GEOPHYSICAL, METEOROLOGICAL, HYDROLOGICAL AND CLIMATOLOGICAL | 41 | 
| GEOPHYSICAL EVENTS | 41 | 
| Table 3.1 – Notable Geophysical Events within the Last Two Decades | 42 | 
| METEOROLOGICAL EVENTS | 43 | 
| Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Wind Scale | 43 | 
| Hurricane Category 1 – 5 | 44 | 
| Table 3.2 – Notable Meteorological Events within the Last Two Decades | 45 | 
| HYDROLOGICAL EVENTS | 46 | 
| Table 3.3 – Notable Hydrological Events within the Last Two Decades | 46 | 
| CLIMATOLOGICAL EVENTS | 47 | 
| Figure 3.1 – The Fire Triangle | 48 | 
| Table 3.4 – Notable Climatological Events within the Last Two Decades | 49 | 
| REVIEW | 50 | 
| REINSURANCE– DEALING WITH THE CONCEPT OF RISK | 50 | 
| THE PERCEPTION OF RISK HAS EVOLVED OVER TIME: INFORMATION AT OUR FINGERTIPS | 50 | 
| MORE MONEY, MORE PROBLEMS | 51 | 
| THE DECLINE OF A RELIGIOUS PERSPECTIVE OF RISK | 52 | 
| AN EXTERNALIZATION OF GUILT AND RESPONSIBILITY | 53 | 
| THE PERCEPTION OF RISK IN THE NEW MILLENNIUM | 53 | 
| Table 3.5 – Top Five Global Risks over the Last Five Years | 54 | 
| INSURANCE CHANGES THE PERCEPTION OF RISK | 56 | 
| REVIEW | 58 | 
| REINSURANCE– EXPERTS AT MANAGING RISK | 58 | 
| TAKING CONTROL OF RISK: A FRAMEWORK OF STRATEGY AND FUNCTION | 59 | 
| ASSESSING AND PRICING INSURANCE RISK WITH PROPER UNDERWRITING | 60 | 
| Randomness, Assessability, Mutuality & Economic Viability | 61 | 
| MANAGING ASSETS: SETTING AND INVESTING EXPECTATIONS | 61 | 
| MANAGING CAPITAL: THE BUFFER AGAINST UNEXPECTED LOSSES | 62 | 
| REVIEW | 63 | 
| INSURANCE VS REINSURANCE: AN ANALYSIS OF TWO DISTINCT INDUSTRIES | 64 | 
| WHAT ARE THE SIMILARITIES OF REINSURANCE AND INSURANCE? | 65 | 
| WHAT ARE THE BENEFITS AND ADVANTAGES OF REINSURANCE? | 66 | 
| CAPACITY | 66 | 
| STABILIZATION | 67 | 
| FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT | 67 | 
| CATASTROPHIC PROTECTION | 67 | 
| ADVICE | 68 | 
| REVIEW | 68 | 
| BASIC TYPES OF REINSURANCE | 68 | 
| TREATY REINSURANCE: COVERING BROAD GROUPS OF POLICIES | 69 | 
| FACULTATIVE REINSURANCE: ASSESSING RISK ON A CASE-BY-CASE BASIS | 70 | 
| PROPORTIONAL VS NON-PROPORTIONAL: WHO GETS THE SHARE? | 71 | 
| Table 3.6 – Proportional Reinsurance | 71 | 
| Table 3.7 – Non-Proportional Reinsurance | 72 | 
| Loss Cap, Annual Aggregate Limit (AAL), Event Limit | 73 | 
| A PRACTICAL EXAMPLE OF A REINSURANCE CONTRACT | 74 | 
| Figure 3.2 – Practical example of a Reinsurance Contract | 74 | 
| Sample Policy: Article I / Automatic Coverage | 75 | 
| Sample Policy: Article II / Facultative Reinsurance | 76 | 
| Sample Policy: Article III / Facultative-Obligatory Reinsurance | 77 | 
| Sample Policy: Facultative-Obligatory Binding Limits | 78 | 
| Sample Policy: Article IV / Guaranteed Capacity Reinsurance | 79 | 
| Sample Policy: Limits of Retention | 81 | 
| Sample Policy: Policy Plans Reinsured | 85 | 
| REVIEW | 87 | 
| APPLYING LINES AND LAYERS TO REINSURANCE TREATIES: A LOOK AT THE BALANCE SHEETS | 88 | 
| RETROCESSION: REINSURANCE FOR REINSURERS | 89 | 
| Spiraling / Excess of Loss (XOL) | 90 | 
| Probable maximum loss | 91 | 
| NEW OR ALTERNATIVE FORMS OF REINSURANCE | 92 | 
| INSURANCE-LINKED SECURITIES (ILS) | 92 | 
| Table 3.8 – Alternative Reinsurance – Catastrophe Bond | 93 | 
| Table 3.9 – Alternative Reinsurance – Industry Loss Warranty (ILW) | 93 | 
| Table 3.10 – Alternative Reinsurance – Collateralized Reinsurance | 94 | 
| Table 3.8 – Alternative Reinsurance – Sidecar | 94 | 
| A CLOSER LOOK AT THE CATASTROPHE BOND | 95 | 
| Indemnity Triggers | 96 | 
| Parametric Triggers | 97 | 
| Industry-loss Triggers | 98 | 
| Modeled-loss Triggers | 99 | 
| A CLOSER LOOK AT THE INDUSTRY LOSS WARRANTY (ILW) | 100 | 
| KEY POINTS | 102 | 
| SECTION 4: THEORY VERSUS REALITY– COPING WITH THE PROBLEMS OF THE WORLD | 103 | 
| THE REAL-WORLD CHALLENGES | 104 | 
| HOW DOES INFLATION AFFECT REINSURANCE? | 104 | 
| Higher Claims Payments | 104 | 
| Lower Investment Value | 104 | 
| More Risk Taking | 105 | 
| HOW DO CATASTROPHE AND SECONDARY PERILS AFFECT REINSURANCE? | 105 | 
| HOW HAS INVESTOR CONCERN AFFECTED REINSURANCE? | 106 | 
| WHAT ARE REINSURANCE COMPANIES DOING TO MITIGATE THESE PROBLEMS? | 107 | 
| REVIEW | 108 | 
| EXPERT ADVICE— NOT SOLVING PROBLEMS, BUT CREATING SOLUTIONS | 109 | 
| THE REGULATORY SIDE | 109 | 
| THE MARKET SIDE | 111 | 
| THE PROFESSIONAL SIDE | 111 | 
| REVIEW | 113 | 
| WHAT IS THE FUTURE OF REINSURANCE? | 114 | 
| HARNESSING DATA AND INVESTING IN NEW TECHNOLOGY AND ANALYTICS CAPABILITIES | 114 | 
| DIFFERENTIATION AND DESIGNING NEW PRODUCTS AND SERVICES | 115 | 
| COLLABORATION | 115 | 
| CONCLUSION: LOOKING TOWARDS THE FUTURE | 116 | 
| KEY POINTS | 117 | 
| SECTION 5: COURSE REVIEW | 118 | 
| SECTION 1: THE IMPACT OF NATURAL AND MAN-MADE DISASTERS ON THE WORLD SCENE | 118 | 
| SECTION 2: THE HISTORY OF REINSURANCE | 121 | 
| SECTION 3: REINSURANCE—MITIGATING CATASTROPHIC RISK IN A DANGEROUS WORLD | 124 | 
| SECTION 4: THEORY VERSUS REALITY— COPING WITH THE PROBLEMS OF THE WORLD | 131 | 
| REFERENCES | 132 | 
United Insurance Educators, Inc.
(800) 735-1155